Democracy

The Unfinished Journey, 508 BC to AD 1993

Edited by John Dunn

In Democracy, noted author John Dunn and twelve expert contributors trace the extraordinary political career of democracy from its appearance in Greece to its resurrection in Eastern Europe. The contributors cover a wide span of democratic history to trace the history of this enduring form of government. They examine how demokratia (literally, "people power") first developed in Athens, and show how the British Leveller movement introduced the idea of political equality. Other essays discuss how the American revolution brought the common people into the affairs of government, how democracy has been seen since the Age of Revolutions, from Rosa Luxembourg to Walter Lippman, and democracy today--how it has failed women, and what the return of democracy will mean for
Eastern Europe. With the recent collapse of socialism, the idea of democracy has moved into the spotlight. And in tracing its history across two millennia, Democracy illuminates the source of its power and explains why it has triumphed so decisively in the modern world.

Democracy

The Unfinished Journey, 508 BC to AD 1993

Edited by John Dunn

Description

The form of democracy first introduced 2,500 years ago by Kleisthenes--introduced, some scholars say, for his own personal gain--is quite different from what we call democracy today. And yet what was essentially a casual, practical solution to local Greek political difficulties has come to stand virtually unchallenged as the ground for modern political authority, and the questions which the Greeks first raised about the meaning of democratic rule still loom over our political and economic life. In Democracy, noted author John Dunn and twelve expert contributors trace the extraordinary political career of democracy from its appearance in ancient Greece to its recent resurrection in Eastern Europe. As the recent collapse of socialism demonstrates, the idea of democracy
still holds a powerful attraction for us. By viewing its astonishing history across this great arc of time, the book shows why democracy today has both the power and the vulnerability which make it the key to understanding politics, and explains why it has triumphed so decisively in the modern world.

Democracy

The Unfinished Journey, 508 BC to AD 1993

Edited by John Dunn

Reviews and Awards

"An excellent political science reader or useful reading for students of law, government, or diplomacy in need of a detailed analysis of this institution."--American Society of International Law Newsletter

"A tour de force of description and analysis, taking the reader from ancient Greece to Tiananmen Square and the present disintegration of federal Yugoslavia...the essays are bright, stimulating and of considerable interest to those who want to understand how that fragile concept, democracy, had evolved...an enlightened route map of the progress so far."--The Times Higher Education Supplement

"It is the message of John Dunn's instructive collection that democracy is special...contains several noteworthy pieces [including] Simon Hornblower's...elegant account of the creation of democratic institutions in ancient Greece...Quentin Skinner's...illuminating interpretation of democratic experiments in the Italian city-republics from the 12th century onwards...it is as a history of democratic ideology that the book is most worthwhile."--Times of London

"We have come to expect John Dunn to search the past for ideas which may help to illuminate the chances and dangers of the present, and to address such aspects of contemporary experience as we trust will decide the shape of the future. Readers of Democracy...will find none of their hopes dashed. Professor Dunn has commissioned highly reputed and trustworthy experts to explore the links between the past promises and frustrations of democratic theory and practice, and its present plight and prospects...go[es] a long way to cataloguing the gains and losses of democratic theory and practice, baring the historical roots of both and discovering what now feeds them."--Times Literary Supplement